The Religious Life of Samuel JohnsonArchon Books, 1983 - 184 oldal |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 41 találatból.
42. oldal
... moral and physical evil . He conceived of moral evil as those acts that arise as a result of a conscious disobedience to the divine will . And he designated such acts as sins , crimes , or offenses . He thought of physical evil as all ...
... moral and physical evil . He conceived of moral evil as those acts that arise as a result of a conscious disobedience to the divine will . And he designated such acts as sins , crimes , or offenses . He thought of physical evil as all ...
43. oldal
... moral evil ; for he believed that it clearly derived from the existence of moral choice . As he ex- plained the matter to Boswell , " moral evil is occasioned by free will , which implies choice between good and evil . ” 20 And it was ...
... moral evil ; for he believed that it clearly derived from the existence of moral choice . As he ex- plained the matter to Boswell , " moral evil is occasioned by free will , which implies choice between good and evil . ” 20 And it was ...
126. oldal
... moral is firmly drawn . And this warning should be heeded because neither the narrative that follows nor the moral that emerges is what we would have expected . In a manner reminis- cent of Sterne , Johnson plays upon our formal and moral ...
... moral is firmly drawn . And this warning should be heeded because neither the narrative that follows nor the moral that emerges is what we would have expected . In a manner reminis- cent of Sterne , Johnson plays upon our formal and moral ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Preface | 9 |
The Anvil of Anxiety | 15 |
The Crucible of Faith | 34 |
Copyright | |
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able accept anxiety appeared argued argument became believe better Boswell called cause character Christ Christian church clear concern condition conduct considered continued conversation conviction course death desire devotion divine doubts duty early effect evil existence experience expressed fact faith fear feel felt finally forces friends give given happiness Hawkins heart Holy hope human Hume imagination important John knew largely later live man's matter meaning meant mind misery moral namely nature never noted observed once original Oxford pain particular passions piety possible practice prayer Press problem question rational realize reason reflection religion religious remarked repentance resolved response salvation Samuel Johnson sense serious Sermon short sins sought spiritual suffered things thought Thrale tion true truth turned ultimate University virtue wanted Wishes writing wrote